Objective - Information based on observable, measurable facts, not opinions or interpretations., Subjective - Information shaped by personal impressions, emotions, or opinions rather than neutral fact., Purpose - The reason a writer or speaker creates a text (argue, inform, persuade, explain, etc.)., Audience - The intended readers or listeners a text is written for; influences tone, diction, and structure., Context - The situation or background surrounding a text (time, place, events, cultural environment)., Evidence - Facts, examples, data, expert statements, or quotations used to support a claim., Claim / Thesis - The writer’s main argument or position., Reasoning - Explanation of why the evidence supports the claim; connects facts to argument., Counterargument - A viewpoint that opposes the claim; addressed to show complexity. In the mock trial: prosecution vs. defense., Synthesis - Combining information from multiple sources to create a new, unified understanding or argument., Tone - The writer’s or speaker’s attitude toward the subject or audience., Diction - The specific word choices a writer uses to shape tone and meaning., Syntax - The arrangement of words and phrases in sentences; affects emphasis, pacing, and tone., Logos - Appeal to logic through facts, evidence, and reasoning., Pathos - Appeal to emotion., Ethos - Appeal to credibility or trustworthiness; may involve shared values or common ground., Text Structure - The organizational pattern of a text (cause/effect, compare/contrast, sequence, problem/solution). Helps create ethos by acknowledging multiple viewpoints., Cause/Effect - A structure showing how one event causes another., Compare/Contrast - A structure that shows similarities and differences; can build ethos by showing understanding of multiple perspectives., Central Idea - The main message or insight a text communicates., Social Relevance - How a text connects to current societal issues such as fairness, responsibility, or bias., Figurative Language - Language not meant literally; used to create imagery or deeper meaning., Simile - A comparison using “like” or “as.”, Metaphor - A comparison stating one thing is another., Hyperbole - An intentional exaggeration for emphasis or effect., Innuendo - A subtle or indirect suggestion—often negative—implying meaning without stating it directly., Accuracy - Information that is correct, reliable, and verifiable., Bias - A preference or prejudice that influences objectivity., Inference - A conclusion based on evidence and reasoning, not directly stated., Assumption - An idea accepted without proof; shapes interpretation., Subject - The topic a text addresses., Intended Effect - What the writer or speaker wants the audience to think, feel, believe, or do., Language (Craft & Structure) - Tools writers use to create meaning: diction, syntax, tone, figurative language., Multimodal - A text using more than one mode—such as written words, images, audio, interviews, or video—to communicate meaning.,
0%
Jury Duty/Study Guide for QA 2, English II
Sdílet
Sdílet
Sdílet
podle
U24765431
10th Grade
ELA
Informational text
Writing essays
Upravit obsah
Tisk
Vložit
Více
Přiřazení
Výsledková tabule/Žebříček
Flash karty
je otevřená šablona. Negeneruje skóre pro žebříček.
Vyžaduje se přihlášení.
Vizuální styl
Fonty
Je vyžadováno předplatné
Možnosti
Přepnout šablonu
Zobrazit vše
Při přehrávání aktivity se zobrazí další formáty.
Otevřené výsledky
Kopírovat odkaz
QR kód
Odstranit
Obnovit automatické uložení:
?